Printed, Flexible and Organic Electronics

Printed, Flexible and Organic Electronics

Printed Electronics, being thin film silicon or inorganic or organic semiconductors, can be used to form Thin Film Transistor Circuits (TFTCs), such as replacing the functionality of simple silicon chips. TFTCs also employ thin film conductors and dielectrics and the ultimate objective is to make many different components at the same time - such as displays, batteries, sensors, microphones etc using the same materials or at least the same deposition techniques thus saving cost and improving reliability. Some TFTCs will be capable of covering large areas to affordably form electronic billboards, smart shelves and so on. They will be lightweight, rugged and mechanically flexible. Often they will be made by rapid, high-volume reel-to-reel processing even forming a part of regular printing processes for graphics. These circuits will be cheap enough to permit electronics where envisaged silicon chips are always or almost always too expensive, where multiple components and needed, and where silicon is impracticle (e.g. not flexible, brittle, thick etc).
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2021
24 Mar 2021

Invisible "Keyhole" Made of Printed, Transparent Electronics

What initially looks like a simple transparent film conceals a whole new level of security. Invisible buttons are printed with conductive ink on the transparent carrier material, the position of which is known only to insiders. Such circuits can be connected to a door lock as an access code, for instance. If the buttons on the polymer film are pressed in the correct order, the door opens.
23 Mar 2021

New Soft, Stretchable Biocompatible Artificial Skin

In the field of robotics, metals offer advantages like strength, durability, and electrical conductivity. But, they are heavy and rigid—properties that are undesirable in soft and flexible systems for wearable computing and human-machine interfaces.
23 Mar 2021

Opportunities for 3D Additive Electronics

Presentation delivered by IDTechEx analyst Dr Matthew Dyson at the AME Academy Future of Additive Manufacturing of Electronics seminar.
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23 Mar 2021

Electrically Conductive Adhesives in Wearable Electronic Applications

Investigating the fields of Component and Electrode Attachments in the Wearables Industry
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22 Mar 2021

Wearable Electronic Textiles for the Smart Dresser

An electronic textile with a large-area display that could have applications in communications, navigation and healthcare is described in Nature. The textile is flexible, breathable and durable, making it an ideal material for practical uses.
19 Mar 2021

Visionect - Wireless Display Platform

13+ years of experience in building ultra low power display solutions.
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18 Mar 2021

High-Volume Orders Finally Arrive for the Graphene Industry

For a long time, graphene has been cited as the wonder material that will change the world. The reality has been very different; disillusionment has started to grow as the hype has not translated into revenue. Is the "tipping point" finally approaching?
17 Mar 2021

Electronic Textiles Made With new Cellulose Thread

Electronic textiles offer revolutionary new opportunities in various fields, in particular healthcare. But to be sustainable, they need to be made of renewable materials. A research team now presents a thread made of conductive cellulose, which offers fascinating and practical possibilities for electronic textiles.
16 Mar 2021

EMS/Nagase

Engineered Material Systems (EMS) has rebranded as Nagase ChemteX America Corporation, following greater alignment with its Japanese parent company Nagase. This background profile briefly summarizes its activities in stretchable conductive inks.
16 Mar 2021

EptaNova

EptaNova provides a wide range of industrial printing inks and functional coatings. This profile focuses on its range of stretchable conductive inks, sold by the subsidiary EptaTech
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16 Mar 2021

DuPont (Wearable Technology)

IDTechEx recently attended a webinar in which Dupont outlined its portfolio of materials for wearable technology, especially electronic skin patches. This includes stretchable conductive inks, adhesives and substrates, marketed under the 'Liveo' and 'Intexar' brands.
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16 Mar 2021

Introducing 3 New Copper Pastes

Copprint launched its first product a year ago. Despite the global pandemic, Copprint successfully fulfilled customer orders from across 25 countries worldwide. At the same time, silver prices surged by 60%, increasing material costs for most printed-electronics products, driving the industry to look for alternatives.
16 Mar 2021

ACI Materials

ACI Materials produce conductive inks adhesives and encapsulants for printed electronics applications, including flexible hybrid electronics and wearable technologies. Its key differentiator is the use of cavitation to produce nanoparticles and micron-sized flakes, which its claims leads to superior dispersion and improved performance.
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15 Mar 2021

Printed Electronics for 6G Smart Surfaces Everywhere

6G Communications is coming to your smartphone around 2030, according to Samsung and others, but it can only succeed if it deploys smart surfaces everywhere. Essential to this is printed electronics.
15 Mar 2021

Organic Electrochemical Transistors: New Technology for Bioelectronics

Organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs) are an exciting emerging technology that are a development organic thin film transistors (OTFTs).
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12 Mar 2021

Using Sound to Shape the Future of Printing

Researchers in the UK have developed a way to coax microscopic particles and droplets into precise patterns by harnessing the power of sound in air. The implications for printing, especially in the fields of medicine and electronics, are far-reaching.
12 Mar 2021

Opportunities for Additively Manufactured Electronics

Additively manufactured electronics is an emerging approach that takes printed electronics into the third dimension. IDTechEx divides the sector into two aspects: 'fully additive' and 'printing onto 3D surfaces'. Both have multiple application opportunities that IDTechEx believes will develop over the next decade.
11 Mar 2021

Analysis of the Overall Printed Sensors Market

Innovation roadmap for the printed sensors market.
11 Mar 2021

Wearable Microgrid Uses the Human Body to Power Small Gadgets

Nanoengineers have developed a "wearable microgrid" that harvests and stores energy from the human body to power small electronics. It consists of three main parts: sweat-powered biofuel cells, motion-powered devices called triboelectric generators, and energy-storing supercapacitors. All parts are flexible, washable and can be screen printed onto clothing.
11 Mar 2021

FBI Certification for First Organic Photodiode Fingerprint Scanner

Isorg announces its Fingerprint Acquisition Profile 10 module has received FBI certification, the first in this category of organic photodiode based optical sensors. The FAP 10 biometrics module is now approved for use in security applications, in particular in mobile device identification for access control at airports and other facilities where the highest security levels are needed.